Gauging Greatness: Is Demetrious Johnson Really Anderson Silva’s Equal?

I bought my first Bill James Baseball Abstract in 1986, just another source of information to fuel my nascent fantasy baseball obsession. I mention this seemingly unrelated nugget of personal information to establish, right off the bat, that I’m not so…

I bought my first Bill James Baseball Abstract in 1986, just another source of information to fuel my nascent fantasy baseball obsession. I mention this seemingly unrelated nugget of personal information to establish, right off the bat, that I’m not some Luddite opposed to modern metrics. I enjoy them all, from WARP to Win Shares, and recognize that more information is often a good thing.

In combat sports, however, statistics are bunk.

Harsh? Maybe. But anyone who has watched a boxing prospect, inflated record built on tomato cans, flail around helplessly the first time he encounters real competition knows all wins aren’t created equal. Neither are punches—but a Mike Tyson uppercut and Nick Diaz slap both count the same according to the folks at CompuBox or Fight Metric.

Our intuition and our eyeballs tell us otherwise.

Simply counting strikes can never sufficiently tell the story of a fight. Not when one good one can erase everything that came before it. For all the complexity of modern martial arts, a fight is a simple thing, one often judged from the gut. Did one man hurt his opponent more than he got hurt?

That’s the essence of fighting—and you don’t need a spreadsheet to figure it out.

It’s worth keeping this in mind as we head into UFC 216, advertised as a historic night for flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson. His fight with Ray Borg, assuming he wins, will mark Johnson’s 11th defense of his championship. It’s the most in the promotion’s history, and it will put him ahead of Anderson Silva, the greatest MMA fighter of all time, in the UFC’s non-existent record book.

We are told this matters. It does not.

For Johnson, of course, it matters a great deal. In lieu of the accolades, love and money that usually land in the lap of dominant cage fighters, he’s seized on “history” as his great prize for a career in the cage. As our own Chad Dundas pointed out, it’s a feat he’s had his eye on for quite some time:

“This milestone obviously means a lot to Johnson.

“The men’s flyweight champion has been citing it as a motivating factor since at least before his second win over John Dodson two years and four fights ago. Beating Borg this weekend will give Johnson 11 straight defenses, moving him out of a tie with Silva and into uncharted waters of historic dominance for a UFC titlist.”

“I hope I can get to 20,” Johnson told ESPN.com’s Brett Okamoto. “I’m on pace to get two or three fights per year, and I think I’ve got five or six years left in me. Maybe I’ll get to something like 18 and walk away from the sport—retire as champion. I think 15 to 18 title defenses is something that would be in the record books forever.”

Twenty or 200, in many ways it doesn’t matter. Fighters, divisions, eras—none are created equal. A winning streak means exactly as much as the names on it. And, unfortunately, most of the names on Johnson’s list could sit down next to fans at UFC 216 and go unremarked. His will be a record built on a very shaky foundation.

That’s not to say Johnson isn’t an extraordinary fighter. He’s amazing, one of the most complete fighters to ever step in a cage. He’s typically better than his foes at every aspect of the fight game, dominating at distance and controlling the clinch. His wrestling is stellar. So are his submissions and his defense.

Despite internet consensus, he also hits hard and makes opponents pay for every mistake. He’s aggressive enough that his fights rarely stall out in any one position, forcing scrambles where, as you might imagine at this point, he is always a step ahead of the opposition. 

Johnson is a fighter who deserves his reputation. But he’s not Anderson Silva.

Silva, still fighting at the age of 42, is more than just a cage fighter. He’s an artist, a Bruce Lee movie brought to life.

In his madcap antics we found a collective joy. Yes, there was pain too—the long, seemingly endless moments of inaction when he couldn’t make an opponent come to him, the rounds he appeared to be considering the deeper meanings of life and not the business in front of him, the arrogance on display as he dropped his hands and gave lesser men a chance at glory.

But the joy, both his own at his handiwork and ours in watching him, was mesmerizing. MMA isn’t a collection of names on a list. It’s a series of moments, seared into our hearts. And no one gave us more moments than Silva. 

There was the front kick to the face of the fearsome Vitor Belfort, the slow-motion dismantling of former light heavyweight champion Forrest Griffin and the last-second submission against Chael Sonnen, who had likely won every second of their first fight until his glorious demise.

These are things that no one who saw them will ever forget, martial mastery on the grandest stage possible, against the very best opposition in the world. Belfort was the face of the company in Brazil. Rich Franklin was trotted out for every mainstream appearance, one of the UFC’s hand-picked ambassadors to evangelize for an entire sport. Griffin was a beloved everyman. Those wins mean more than beating up 100 Borgs on a pay-per-view undercard.

Sure, on paper, the two mens‘ title reigns are strikingly similar. Devoid of context, looking only at the numbers, Johnson’s competition was even slightly better. Silva mixed in four fights at light heavyweight and finished more of his opponents than Johnson did. Then again, Johnson has never looked as vulnerable as Silva did, never dropped his hands and his focus and been knocked cold by a hungry young foe.

As you can see, parsing the record is a tricky business. Luckily, none of it matters. The stats can say any number of things depending on how you read them.

Numbers lie. Perhaps memories do too—but they do so in a much more satisfying way.

Silva has transcended the discussion in many ways, his legend so great that questioning his status is like doubting Spiderman or Goku. He exists on a plane beyond mere athletics, a human cartoon who actually once walked the planet, a fighter capable of the impossible.

Johnson is a lot of things—a charming man, a devoted husband, a gamer and a delightful fighter. His streak of success is notable, his position at the top of the MMA pound-for-pound list well deserved. But he’s not Anderson Silva. And no phony history can change that.

            

Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.

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UFC 216: Derrick Lewis Rises Against Suddenly Reviled Fabricio Werdum

People love Derrick Lewis.
No, seriously. People love him.
He’s the type of character you’d only ever find in mixed martial arts, a brawling wild man who went from troubled youth to tow truck driver to top-flight athlete in a little over a decade.
He’s…

People love Derrick Lewis.

No, seriously. People love him.

He’s the type of character you’d only ever find in mixed martial arts, a brawling wild man who went from troubled youth to tow truck driver to top-flight athlete in a little over a decade.

He’s got some of the best social media in the game. In February, he memorably smashed one of the sport’s most disliked fighters in Travis Browne, took a swipe at his then-girlfriend Ronda Rousey not long after doing it and showed up at the post-fight presser brandishing his very own interim heavyweight title.

He’ll make a poop joke in the cage, muse over the McRibs he lost out on during training camp and offer the likes of Paige VanZant some NSFW advice following a fight pullout.

For fans, he’s a legend. For foes, he’s a nightmare.

Before a stoppage loss to Mark Hunt this past summer, Lewis had won six in a row—five by KO or TKO—and was the hottest heavyweight on Earth. He’s netted three performance bonuses in his UFC career and easily could have been fighting for a world title with a better turn of fate against Hunt.

As he’s increasingly learned the game and rounded out his form, he’s become something to behold. This Saturday he’ll have a chance to show how far he’s come, as he’ll trade shots with former UFC champion Fabricio Werdum at UFC 216 in Las Vegas.

Werdum, interestingly, has suffered a fall to serve as the inverse of Lewis’ rise.

Though he remains as talented an athlete as there is among UFC big men, he’s lost two of three following a four-year undefeated run.

He was once beloved the way Lewis is now: a light-hearted, comedic personality who was known for making funny faces and representing MMA‘s gentle art better than anyone. Unfortunately after a string of hate speech and a penchant for picking fights with guys smaller than him, the whole sport seems to have changed its opinion and no amount of “Werdum Face” can undo it.

Where Werdum’s social media posts are doing things like defending homophobic rants in multiple languages, Lewis’ are documenting his attempts at literally saving lives in the middle of one of the worst hurricanes in recent American history.

Predictably, that resonates with people.

There’s a realness to Lewis that only the most marketable MMA fighters seem to have. While so many fighters waste their time shouting (tweeting?) into the void about the sanctity of world titles or about it being “their time,” men like Lewis are out there making fans by being themselves.

It is fun to watch Lewis carve fellow fighters and fans with his sharp wit, and it all belies a likable impishness that makes you feel like this beast could just as easily be at your family gathering telling jokes and having fun.

Watching him perform at the highest levels of his craft with some of the more exciting outcomes seen in recent memory is something of an icing on the cake.

Werdum’s fall, both in image and recent results, comes at a perfect time for Lewis. As he did with Browne, he gets to serve as something of an agent for fan frustrations by gloving up this weekend.

People are firmly behind him and many are eager to see some karma befall Werdum. Lewis, with his brute strength and brawling style, has a capacity to be very karmic in his violence.

And of course, such a win would catapult him to the very top of the UFC heavyweight rankings (he’s sixth; Werdum second) and probably place him no less than a fight away from a title shot. It’s not a foregone conclusion, as Werdum is an athlete and a talent well above those Lewis has fought prior, but the stakes are as high as they’ve ever been for him.

Show up big and the MMA community will surely rejoice; display a continued development curve to match his popularity, and it might make the next belt he brings to a presser into the real thing.

        

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

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UFC 216: Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee Are Auditioning for a Conor McGregor Fight

Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee will compete on Saturday at UFC 216 for a chance at MMA’s richest prize.
And no, that doesn’t mean the UFC’s interim lightweight title.
That makeshift championship will be a nice bonus and—depending on who emerges vict…

Tony Ferguson and Kevin Lee will compete on Saturday at UFC 216 for a chance at MMA‘s richest prize.

And no, that doesn’t mean the UFC’s interim lightweight title.

That makeshift championship will be a nice bonus and—depending on who emerges victorious this weekend at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas—either Ferguson or Lee will make a fine interim 155-pound king. More than just a scrap over the gold, however, this pair should probably think of their main-event bout as an audition.

After all, the winner stands a decent chance of being Conor McGregor‘s next opponent, whenever the actual lightweight champ returns to the Octagon.

McGregor last week made his first public appearance since his mega-hyped boxing match with Floyd Mayweather on August 26. During an interview with British journalist Caroline Pearce in Glasgow, Scotland, at an event called “An Evening With Conor McGregor,” the 29-year-old Irish fighter appeared eager to get back to action.

McGregor also mentioned a laundry list of possibilities for his next bout.

“I’m sitting on a loss in my mind,” he said of moving on from his 10th-round TKO defeat by Mayweather, via MMA Fighting’s Peter Carroll. “So I’m just seeing what options are there.”

McGregor listed a rematch with Mayweather in boxing or MMA as well as a potential meeting in the Octagon with boxer Paul Malignaggi among his hopes and dreams. From the outside looking in, however, both those options seem somewhat far-fetched.

On the more realistic side of things, McGregor said he’s also eyeing a third fight against Nate Diaz or a title defense against a top lightweight contender like Khabib Nurmagomedov, Justin Gaethje or the winner of Ferguson vs. Lee.

Most observers believe McGregor‘s pick will be Diaz.

A trilogy fight with the Stockton bad boy will earn McGregor the most money, and his advisers have already said they’d prefer it. On top of that, it’s a winnable matchup for McGregor, since he defeated Diaz via majority decision in their most recent meeting in August 2016.

But McGregor also knows Diaz drives a hard financial bargain in negotiations and told Pearce last week that if Diaz “starts to price himself out” of a third fight (h/t MMA Junkie), he might not want to wait. McGregor warned he might simply move on to a unification fight against the winner of Ferguson vs. Lee.

If that came to pass, it might well make MMA purists happy. They’ve been complaining about McGregor‘s unwillingness to defend his UFC titles since he beat Jose Aldo for the featherweight strap in December 2015.

Now he’s been away from the sport for over a year, those criticisms seem more valid than ever. McGregor‘s last UFC appearance was his lightweight title win over Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205 in November 2016, and afterward he announced an extended absence from competition—one that lasted until he boxed Mayweather this summer.

The delay was long enough for the UFC to twice set up interim title fights.

First, the company moved to put Ferguson opposite Nurmagomedov at UFC 209, before Nurmagomedov was hospitalized during his weight cut. Now it will be Ferguson and Lee vying for the interim gold and perhaps the opportunity to coax McGregor off the bench and into the cage.

As always, however, McGregor calls his own shots.

“It’s got to excite me,” McGregor said, via Carroll. “Let me see what these two fools do this weekend. We’ll see what the energy is like.”


Effort shouldn’t be a problem for Ferguson and Lee, both of whom are high-energy performers and savvy enough to know exactly what’s at stake here for both of them.

Especially for Lee, this fight represents a life-changing opportunity.

The 25-year-old Michigan native has been ticketed as a potential star since arriving in the UFC in early 2014. That said, his in-cage resume to this point doesn’t exactly scream immediate title contender.

Lee is 9-2 overall in the UFC, but hasn’t faced much top-flight competition. His current five-fight win streak includes four consecutive stoppages, but also features names like Efrain Escudero and Magomed Mustafaev.

His most recent victory, over Michael Chiesa in June, was a main event affair, but was mostly notable because Lee and Chiesa managed to stoke some excitement with their on-stage scuffle during a press conference in May.

On the plus side, Lee has a very high ceiling and obvious charisma. In the new, WME-IMG owned UFC, that was enough to fast-forward the No. 7-ranked lightweight to an immediate interim title shot.

As far as this big step-up in competition against the uber-tough Ferguson goes, Lee’s certainly not lacking in confidence.

“When you look at it, and you say a man is tough, and that’s his biggest attribute, that ain’t good for him…,” Lee said this week at a media lunch, via MMA Junkie’s Simon Samano. “That just means it’s going to take a longer ass-whooping.”

A win here immediately forges Lee as an elite lightweight, wraps a title around his waist and puts him in prime position to score a future date with McGregor. As far as one-night opportunities go, it’s hard to top that.

Most of the same is also true for Ferguson, with one exception: we already know El Cucuy is elite.

Ferguson has been fighting in the Octagon since 2010, has put up a record of 12-1 and has been taking on high-level competition—Josh Thomson, Edson Barboza and Rafael dos Anjos, for example—for at least the last couple years.

More recently it has felt like it was only a matter of time before the 33-year-old Californian got a crack at the gold. Ferguson is one of a handful of 155-pounders whose careers have been sidetracked by McGregor‘s protracted absence. While this fight seems like Lee’s big break, it feels as though it’s a long time coming for Ferguson.

As for Lee’s meteoric rise to an interim title shot, the longtime contender doesn’t seem to mind. He said this week during a media lunch he thinks Lee deserves it. Well, sort of.

“Kevin Lee has got more heart than half these dudes in the Top Five,” Ferguson said, via Junkie’s Samano. “Since he’s got more heart, we’re going to go in there and give you guy a f–king show. … He’s a very well rounded fighter. He’s an athlete. … [But] I know how to beat this kid. He’s mentally weak, like half the roster in the UFC.”

Ferguson is going off as a 2-to-1 favorite for this fight, according to Odds Shark. If he emerges victorious here, his exciting style and status as an eager trash-talker also make him a compelling opponent for McGregor down the road.

The Irishman, though, continues to control the most lucrative real estate in the sport.

After coming out of the Mayweather fight even more famous than before, McGregor has the entire UFC roster and most of boxing angling for a bout against him.

That’s why when Ferguson and Lee meet this weekend at UFC 216, winning the interim lightweight title will be high on the priority list—but impressing McGregor in the process may be even more important.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Cris Cyborg vs. Holly Holm Is Biggest Women’s Fight UFC Can Muster in Down 2017

It’s borderline miraculous that Cris “Cyborg” Justino and Holly Holm appear to be closing in on a women’s featherweight title fight for UFC 219.
Not so long ago, these two women were both down and out, with Justino facing a lengthy doping suspension an…

It’s borderline miraculous that Cris “Cyborg” Justino and Holly Holm appear to be closing in on a women’s featherweight title fight for UFC 219.

Not so long ago, these two women were both down and out, with Justino facing a lengthy doping suspension and Holm reeling from three straight losses. The 145-pound division itself had been so problematic it seemed possible the UFC might scrap the whole thing while it was still in its infancy.

Yet somehow, here we are, with Justino vs. Holm suddenly looming as the biggest women’s MMA bout on the horizon.

If the money is right, both parties have already said they’re game, and Justino is very publicly campaigning for a spot on the company’s end-of-the-year pay-per-view Dec. 30 in Las Vegas.

Not only does this booking represent a complete reversal of fortunes for both Cyborg and Holm, but it’s also a commentary on the state of WMMA—which is slumping toward the end of 2017 right along with the rest of the UFC.

Back when Ronda Rousey reigned as women’s bantamweight champ from 2013-15, there was no more vibrant storyline than the arrival of women in the Octagon. Rousey was the promotion’s biggest star and her popularity put the UFC’s female fighters on equal footing with the men, a rarity in professional sports.

Following her absence after back-to-back losses, however, women’s MMA finds itself without a focal point and therefore on uncharacteristically shaky promotional ground.

New 135-pound champ Amanda Nunes has given her division a modicum of stability, but the bantamweight hasn’t yet connected with a large portion of UFC fans. Add in her last-minute withdrawal from UFC 213 and a questionable split decision win over Valentina Shevchenko at UFC 215 this month, and Nunes has ways to go before establishing herself as a reliable drawing card.

At strawweight, Joanna Jedrzejczyk continues to be unstoppable and a favorite of the hardcore MMA set. Her impending bout against Rose Namajunas will be a crackerjack, but it will take third-tier billing on a jam-packed UFC 217 card on Nov. 4.

Meanwhile, the women’s flyweight division is still a work in progress. The ongoing Season 26 of The Ultimate Fighter aims to crown the UFC’s first women’s 125-pound champion, but it remains unclear how viable that division will ultimately be—or whether Jedrzejczyk will merely add its title to her already impressive collection.

That unexpectedly leaves Justino and Holm—perhaps two of the only proven draws left in WMMA—to carry much of the load.

But turn back the clock a year or so and that was certainly not the way things were trending.

Holm’s loss of the women’s bantamweight title to Miesha Tate at UFC 196 touched off a lengthy and difficult stretch for her. She dropped her next fight to Shevchenko in July 2016, then a third straight to Germaine de Randamie at UFC 208 in June.

The losing streak effectively squandered the momentum Holm had established upon arriving in the UFC, when she notched a pair of wins and shocked the world by knocking out Rousey at UFC 193.

At the same time, her relationship with her UFC bosses appeared strained. In March 2016, White blasted Holm’s longtime manager, Lenny Fresquez, as “an old boxing guy who thinks he’s smart and he isn’t” (via MMA Fighting’s David St. Martin) for putting her into the fight with Tate in the first place.

 

Already 35 years old, it’s clear Holm needs to act fast to preserve her status as a top-level UFC star.

Justino’s on-again, off-again feuds with company brass have also been well-documented.

Long regarded as one of the best fighters in MMA, Justino was already the former Strikeforce and current Invicta FC featherweight champ when she landed an overdue UFC contract in March 2015.

Prior to that, she had publicly beefed both with White and Rousey. A bout between Rousey and Justino was a frequent topic of internet speculation but never seemed close to fruition.

Even after officially joining the UFC, things didn’t go all that smoothly for Cyborg.

For starters, since the UFC didn’t yet have a featherweight division—which would have been Justino’s natural landing spot—her first two bouts were contested at 140-pound catchweights. Then, when the organization finally did institute the 145-pound class, it couldn’t come to terms with her in time for its inaugural title fight.

Instead, the UFC put the championship on De Randamie after she edged Holm via decision.

To make matters even more circuitous, Cyborg failed a drug test in December 2016. The transgression threatened to sidetrack her for up to two years, until the UFC and U.S. Anti-Doping Agency retroactively granted her a therapeutic use exemption for a banned diuretic and wiped away the suspension.

After that, it was all systems go. The UFC stripped De Randamie in June due to her unwillingness to defend the title against Cyborg. Justino then defeated Tonya Evinger for the vacant belt at UFC 214 and now stands poised to take her place as one of the UFC’s more marketable champions.

Just as quickly, Holm revitalized her own career with a head-kick knockout of Bethe Correia three months ago. The victory abruptly made her the consensus No. 1 contender in both the bantamweight and featherweight divisions—and it’s Justino that makes the most sense as an opponent.

Justino has duly established herself as the most fearsome woman on the planet, but it has been a long time since she has faces truly elite competition. Holm will certainly fit the bill in that regard, as a former UFC champ and a decorated striker in her own right.

Cyborg is known as an aggressive knockout artist and Holm is at her best against opponents who bring the fight straight to her. Stylistically, it couldn’t be much better.

More importantly, both fighters possess notable fan followings and their bout should move the needle more than anything Nunes or Jedrzejczyk could come up with at this point.

In a year when the UFC has struggled to book big fights, the best option available at the moment is to book this all-star matchup for the 145-pound title.

That means giving fans Cyborg vs. Holm before the end of 2017.

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Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz 3: The Only Fight to Make

Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz?
In the words of Diaz, I’m not surprised.
This is destiny, or at least something like it.
I’ve long written that McGregor would never return to the Octagon after his Mayweather payday. McGregor himself hasn’t been shy about…

Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz?

In the words of Diaz, I’m not surprised.

This is destiny, or at least something like it.

I’ve long written that McGregor would never return to the Octagon after his Mayweather payday. McGregor himself hasn’t been shy about his mantra: Get in. Get Rich. Get out.

He’s rich beyond measure now, so it seems like a good time for the third part of that plan.

And besides, how could he go back to making a few million dollars for a single fight? He just pulled in well over $100 million in the easiest payday he’ll ever receive. The idea of McGregor going back to the UFC and facing the likes of Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee and Khabib Nurmagomedov? For 1/10th of what he received for his last fight?

It’s silly.

Of course, that was before Dana White started talking about granting McGregor an ownership stake in the UFC, per MMAjunkie.

White’s admission was the latest sign that in this new WME-UFC world, the old rules can be broken. Genuine stars are treated differently than the rank and file. Exceptions can be made.

If the rumor mill is correct, McGregor‘s getting another special exemption.

The Irish tabloid Sunday World reported over the weekend that McGregor vs. Diaz 3 was set for December 30 in Las Vegas, Nevada, which makes all the sense in the world. Tabloids, in general, aren’t exactly known for the accuracy of their reporting; you take their copy with a whole bottle of salt.

But then White tweeted that the story wasn’t true. Which essentially confirmed that it was, in fact, true. Any UFC fan will tell you that it’s best to just believe the opposite of whatever White says. Veteran journalist Ariel Helwani—a much more dependable source than White these days—noted that the fight wasn’t a done deal, but that it was still the plan.

Whether it happens in December or sometime in 2018, it’s clear that McGregor‘s next fight in the UFC will be against Diaz. It’s the fight that makes sense, both for McGregor and for the UFC. Yeah, the winner of Ferguson vs. Lee on October 7 will be a much more deserving title fight candidate than Diaz. The Stockton kid hasn’t fought at lightweight in two years, and his record in the division isn’t stellar.

But records don’t matter. The idea that someone is deserving of a title shot being passed over has no place in mixed martial arts, and yet it’s the one concept a subsection of fans have the most trouble grasping. From its inception, mixed martial arts has been about drawing money. Hardcore fans like to speak of PRIDE and how good things were in the old days; some of them would be wise to read up on the founder of PRIDE and why that company came about in the first place.

The modern UFC has been wrapped in the veneer of sport, with a network television sheen and high-gloss vibe that makes it more palatable to a wider audience. But in truth, it’s the same old business it has always been, and the point of the thing is the same as it’s always been: maximize eyeballs and pull in dollars by the fistful.

Ferguson vs. Lee is a sublime fight. The winner will be interim lightweight champion, and in a perfect world, they would move on to a unification match with McGregor. They’d get the chance to show the world that they, not the loud-mouthed Irish guy who talked his way to the top, are the best in the world at what they do.

But winning the interim lightweight title will put them no closer to McGregor than they are right now, because they’ve already been leapfrogged by Diaz. For McGregor, Diaz represents the biggest payday possible. The biggest chance to continue filling his coffers.

McGregor has never once cared about proving that he’s the best in the world, at least not for the reasons everyone else cares about proving they’re the best. If that was his goal, he would’ve given Jose Aldo a rematch. He would’ve faced down the top featherweights in the UFC before moving to lightweight. He would’ve competed against Nurmagomedov and the very best at lightweight and not even considered a bout against Mayweather, regardless of the money it represented.

But none of those things happened, because what McGregor cares about is being wealthy. Which is absolutely fine, because he’s been honest about his goals and the path he’ll take to reach those goals from the start. It’s not like we’re seeing an unexpected personality change. This is who he has been from the very beginning.

Which is why nobody should be surprised that he’s returning to the Octagon not against a legitimate contender who can help him cement a legacy, but against the man who will help him earn the biggest payday possible.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

His Star May Be Rising Now, but Anthony Smith Took the Long Way to UFC Success

It wasn’t that long ago. Anthony Smith still clearly remembers the time when he and his girlfriend had to shake down the couch cushions for change so they could get something to eat. He also remembers the time when, as a younger fighter barnstorm…

It wasn’t that long ago. Anthony Smith still clearly remembers the time when he and his girlfriend had to shake down the couch cushions for change so they could get something to eat. He also remembers the time when, as a younger fighter barnstorming the Midwest, he was asked if there was a middleweight he would refuse to fight out of pure fear.

He remembers how he answered the question, too: Hector Lombard.

Things are different now for Smith, thanks to a three-fight UFC win streak that culminated (for now) with a third-round knockout of the very same Lombard September 16 at UFC Fight Night 116. Granted, Lombard is now 39 years old and diminished in skill, but his name still carries value both for fans and for Smith.

“Someone asked who I wouldn’t want to fight, and I didn’t hesitate. It was Hector Lombard,” Smith said. “He was killing it in Bellator back then. I think this was 2009. …I think I had put him on a pedestal. This win was probably my biggest accomplishment.”

Smith’s success, and the blunt-force muay thai style he’s used to achieve it, is getting him noticed. He’s been climbing the cards of late, from Fight Pass preliminaries to main cards on prime-time cable. He’s knocking on the door of a top-15 ranking in the UFC’s solid middleweight division.

It’s been a pretty long road for Smith, who at 29 years of age has already racked up a 28-12 record during his pro career, which began in 2008. Much of it happened in volume, with Smith competing up to six times a year from Yankton, South Dakota, to Council Bluffs, Iowa.

“I’ve been chasing this dream for a long time,” Smith said.

After fighting 20 times in three years and with a record of 13-7, in 2011 Smith got a call from the now-defunct Strikeforce promotion. He won that by second-round knockout. But the path remained circuitous.

Two years later he made his UFC debut but was waived when he lost, a damaging kneebar submission to blame.

More bouncing around followed, but the shows and the showings slowly got better, as did his skill set and fight acumen. When he returned to the UFC in 2016, he was on a seven-fight win streak, punctuated by a first-round TKO of UFC veteran Josh Neer.

Along the way, Smith appeared to increase his stamina and shore up his defense. It’s the same approach that worked against Lombard: using his gargantuan-for-a-middleweight 6’4” frame (plus a 77” reach), Smith throws a diverse arsenal of strikes from range but is well-versed in any phase.

His career takedown defense percentage, according to stat keeper FightMetric, is just 44 percent, but he was able to do enough to keep the fight standing against Lombard—it is always interesting to see how Smith fares against opponents with takedown-heavy strategies. In either case, the engine that makes it all go for Smith is aggression and a sheer willingness to gut his way through difficulty.

“I force people to fight,” Smith said. “I’m that guy for anybody in this division. You have to be a problem-solver in there, and I’m a problem-solver.”

But just being in the UFC, even winning in the UFC, doesn’t change your life overnight. Those moments of destitution were relatively recent. Now, however, after years of toil on a host of different circuits, Smith, his fiance, and their three small children have finally found stability. 

“It’s the little things for us,” Smith said. “We don’t have to scrounge for change to feed ourselves, there’s no calculator out when we’re shopping. It’s nice to go to the gas station and fill up the tank without looking at the price. We can jump on a plane and go somewhere if we want. I still drive a [Ford] F150, it’s just a little newer.”

Smith also realizes, of course, that it’s a smoke on the wind unless you can keep it going. That’s why he wants a bigger challenge next time out. In particular, he calls out three other middleweights—Uriah Hall, Krzysztof Jotko and David Branch—who were also on the UFC Fight Night 116 marquee. If he doesn’t get a ranked opponent next, Smith said, he may explore his options at 205 pounds.

If he had his druthers, though, he’d prefer to face Branch, the former World Series of Fighting champion who fell to Luke Rockhold in the evening’s main event.

“I like how he fights,” Smith said. “He’s a tough dude, and he doesn’t get enough respect for his style. There’s no beef, we’re cordial, but he has dismissed me a little in the past. Now that I’ve won and he’s lost, the tables have turned. We’re in each other’s crosshairs.” 

Branch is known for a more conservative style, but it could be that Smith is the right fit to compel him into a more uptempo game. After all, Smith has had plenty of experience willing himself to fight. How hard could it be to do the same to others?

“I never have a boring fight,” he said. “It may not be the prettiest style, but I’m not here for that. I’m the toughest guy in the UFC.”

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